![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() 1937) released from prison at request of Soviet Union (1940) reentered Rumania with the Red Army (1944) led Communist demonstrations in Bucharest (1944–45) appointed foreign minister of Rumania, helped to organize the Warsaw Pact (1947) attacked the heretical leadership of the Yugoslav Communist Party (1948) named vice-premier (1949) treated in the Soviet Union for breast cancer (1950) purged from Communist Party (1952).Ī leading Communist for many years, Rumanian Ana Pauker played a crucial role in Eastern Europe following World War II. Studied for a period in Switzerland (1915–21) joined Communist Party (1921) elected to Central Committee (1922) imprisoned (late 1920s) in exile in Moscow (1931–34) imprisoned in Rumania (1935) husband executed in the Soviet Union (c. ![]() Born Ana Rabinovici in Moldavia in northern Rumania sometime in 1893 or 1894 died in Bucharest in June 1960 daughter of a Jewish butcher who held the status of rabbi in his community attended medical school in Switzerland for a period beginning in 1915 married Marcel Pauker, a fellow Rumanian student (died, probably in 1937) children: three. Foreign minister of Rumania, one of the leading Communist officials in Eastern Europe in the period after World War II, who was the first woman to serve as Cabinet minister in charge of a European country's international relations. ![]()
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